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CARDIAC TRANSMEMBRANE ION CHANNELS AND ACTION POTENTIALS: CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY AND ARRHYTHMOGENIC BEHAVIOR

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 101, Issue 3, Pages 1083-1176

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00024.2019

Keywords

action potential; arrhythmia; heart; ion channels; remodeling

Categories

Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Office [NKFIH-K-119992, GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00006, NKFIH-K-128851, PD-125402, FK-129117]
  2. Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  3. Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  4. Wellcome Trust Fellowship in Basic Biomedical Sciences [214290/Z/18/Z]
  5. NC3Rs Infrastructure for Impact Award [NC/P001076/1]

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Cardiac arrhythmias often stem from changes in the electro-physiological properties of cardiac cells and their ionic mechanisms. Understanding the pathophysiology of human cellular electrophysiology can aid in developing novel antiarrhythmic strategies.
Cardiac arrhythmias are among the leading causes of mortality. They often arise from alterations in the electro-physiological properties of cardiac cells and their underlying ionic mechanisms. It is therefore critical to further unravel the pathophysiology of the ionic basis of human cardiac electrophysiology in health and disease. In the first part of this review, current knowledge on the differences in ion channel expression and properties of the ionic processes that determine the morphology and properties of cardiac action potentials and calcium dynamics from cardiomyocytes in different regions of the heart are described. Then the cellular mechanisms promoting arrhythmias in congenital or acquired conditions of ion channel function (electrical remodeling) are discussed. The focus is on human-relevant findings obtained with clinical, experimental, and computational studies, given that interspecies differences make the extrapolation from animal experiments to human clinical settings difficult. Deepening the understanding of the diverse pathophysiology of human cellular electrophysiology will help in developing novel and effective antiarrhythmic strategies for specific subpopulations and disease conditions.

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